Simple Form Objects with validations and associations making no assumptions about persistence
This is so little code you almost can't call it a library. It's simply a wrapper around Virtus and ActiveModel validations, with an extra validation to allow for validating associations. I hesistated to even make it a gem, but it's a pattern we use across multiple apps so it kind of made sense.
After working on many massive rails apps, it's become clear that model validations can cause a lot
of headaches, particularly when you get into custom validations and conditional validations. At
Influitive, we now consider these types of validations on the model an anti-pattern and stick purely
to validations that support underlying database constraints. Validations such as NOT NULL and UNIQUE
make sense on the model. Validations such as validate property x if it's a full moon do NOT
make sense in the model as these are contextual to a particular use case. This use case should be
wrapped up in its own object and used to validate input before it hits your persistence layer.
Again, I hardly consider this a library on its own, it's just a thin wrapper. We worked with both Reform and ActiveType and both always felt awkward to use and required a new dsl to understand.
- Reform feels weird to me because I generally just want params in and params out with validations and param whitelisting. It requires however an underlying model to be passed in, then validated with params separately passed in. It has a whole DSL for persistence which I never fully grasped, though as the author states, it's optional to use.
- ActiveType is very much ActiveRecord dependent. It also unfortunately sticks to the Rails
accepts_nested_attributesparadigm which requires nesting to be done with a{association_name}_attributeskey which I find annoying. (your public interface should NOT be determined by the framework you use under the hood). Futhermore, for associations, it instantiates raw models as the children, as opposed to other form objects, which to me defeats the purpose of a form object library.
This is not to speak badly about either library. They both obviously suit the use-cases of the authors, they just didn't suit our use-case.
Since inflorm is nothing more than a thin wrapper over Virtus and ActiveModel::Validations. As such, you can find advanced documentation on this sites, but a simple example would look like this:
class ParentForm
  include Inflorm
  attribute :name,  String
  attribute :title, String
  attribute :child, ChildForm      # has_one association
  attribute :pets,  Array[PetForm] # has_many association
  validates :name,  presence: true
  validates :child, associated: true
  validates :pets,  associated: true
end
class ChildForm
  include Inflorm
  attribute :age, Integer
  validates :age, presence: true
end
class PetForm
  include Inflorm
  attribute :name,    String
  attribute :species, String
  validates :name,    presence: true
  validates :species, presence: true
endUsing those classes like so:
  # Simple object
  p = ParentForm.new name: ''
  p.valid? # => false
  # Object with has_one association
  p = ParentForm.new name: 'x', child: {age: 123}
  p.child.class # => ChildForm
  p.valid? # => true
  # Object with has_many association
  p = ParentForm.new pets: [{species: 'dog', name: 'George'}, {species: 'cat', name: 'Fluffy'}]
  p.pets.class # => Array
  p.pets[0].class # => PetForm
  p.valid? # => trueInflorm doesn't care about persistence. That's what your ORM is for (or appropriate
Command,
Repository etc). Since it's just params in and
params out, you can just call to_h on your form object to get the validated, whitelisted params.
This means you don't need to use things like strong_parameters.
A common pattern in the rails world is to do something like:
# some_controller.rb
if @my_object.save
  # do_something
else
  # something else
endInflorm includes a very simple implementation of save by allowing you to define a persist! method
on your form that will only be called if your form is valid. It looks like this:
def save
  valid? && persist!
endSo if you define a persist! method on your form like so:
def persist!
  MyCommand.persist(to_h)
endThen your controller can stick to the above pattern. You might need the underlying model from that persistence, so assuming the command above returns that, you can do something like this in your controller
# some_controller.rb
if model = @my_object.save
  render json: model.to_json
else
  render json: {errors: model.errors.messages}
endWhat's with the name?
At Influitive we're known for our very creative portmanteaus. This is the ultimate portmanteau of a portmanteau combining Influitive and Form. Clearly we're not very creative people.
Will this ever hook into my persistence layer X?
No
My association is nil, but my main object still passes validation. How do I prevent this?
Inflorm won't validate nil or empty arrays of associations (since there's nothing to validate). If you need to ensure that the association is there, simply validate its presence like so
validates :child, presence: true. This will ensure thatchildis not nil (or empty in thehas_manycase)
- to_hright now relies on Rails ActiveSupport- Object#as_jsonas it will traverse all properties and convert them recursively to an appropriate primitive or hash/array. This isn't possible right now with just Virtus as calling- to_hon the Virtus object will still nested associations as their defined instance type. I'm really not happy about having to use Rails monkeypatching for this. Apparently Virtus 2.0 will have better to_h handling
- The current association validator pollutes the ruby global constant namespace by defining a AssociatedValidatorclass. There's got to be a way to register this validation without doing so. This would be a nice change.
- Maybe add has_one,has_manymethods to mimic ActiveRecord associations but for form objects?. I kind of question the extra overhead, although it's not too much cognitive load since most people inherently understandhas_one/has_many
I really haven't done any significant work to make this gem. It's all thanks to virtus contributors and activemodel contributors. So go thank them!
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release to create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.
- Fork it ( https://github.com/[my-github-username]/inflorm/fork )
- Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
- Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
- Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
- Create a new Pull Request